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With energy prices depressed, gold and bullion-related exchange traded funds are seeing diminished demand as a hedge against inflation.

On Monday, the SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEArca: GLD), iShares Gold Trust (NYSEArca: IAU) and ETFS Physical Swiss Gold Shares (NYSEArca: SGOL) were up about 1.3%. The gold ETFs have dipped almost 2% in the past three months.

Gold has been used as a safe store of value. However, as oil prices decline, markets are anticipating lower inflation levels.

The Labor Department revealed that the consumer price index fell to a seasonally adjusted 0.3% in November, the steepest one-month dip in almost six years, reports Josh Mitchell for the Wall Street Journal.

“The tumble in oil prices is detrimental to gold’s health,” David Meger, the director of metal trading at Vision Financial Markets, said in the Bloomberg article. “Of course, the dollar and expectations of strong GDP continue to weigh on gold.”

The stronger U.S. dollar has also made gold, which is priced in USD, more expensive for foreign investors. The greenback is now trading near a five-year high against a basket of 10 currencies due to Federal Reserve interest rate hike expectations.